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Exam (elaborations) Introduction To Communication Studies

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Questions and answers for the written exam of Introduction to Communication studies. Final grade 18/20

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INTRODUCTION TO COMMUNICATION STUDIES (mock exam)


Mock exam


A. Fill in the blanks – fill in the blank spaces in the following paragraphs (the answers

can consist of one or more words. For some blank spaces more than one answer is

correct).


Newspapers have a relatively long history. Some would argue that the first

newspapers have been around since the 15th Century, i.e. ever since the printing

press was invented by Gutenberg. Media historians challenge this however. Albeit

since the printing press newsletters and pamphlets were published, these publications

lacked periodicity in order to speak of a true daily newspaper.


Only a few centuries later, the basic conditions were met to have a newspaper

published every day. The first daily, the Pennsylvania Evening Post and Daily

Advertiser, was published end of the 18th Century when in different Western

countries the Industrial Revolution was unfolding. In this context, the newspaper

could develop rapidly because of the interplay of:


- technological factors, e.g. increased speed of printing process;


- economic factors, e.g. decrease in price of paper;


- cultural factors, e.g. the increase in literacy levels; and


- political factors, e.g. the rise of liberalism.


Mid 19th Century, the breakthrough followed of mass newspapers, also called the

“Penny Press”, because of their increasingly cheaper price. In the 20th Century

newspapers could be considered a true mass medium across the world.


The parallel development of newspapers and liberal parliamentary democracies is not

coincidental. The press is seen as a fourth estate or watchdog, which means that –

amongs other things – it reports on and controls the functioning of parliament and

, government. According to Jürgen Habermas, the press is an essential part of a well-

functioning public sphere (a concept Habermas is well known for). Herein, activities

of the state are critically and rationally discussed to contribute to the general

interest.


Whereas Habermas stressed the positive role of newspapers to support rational

debate, Marshall McLuhan argues that in a literary society the focus is on hot / cool

media, predominantly extending only one sense, namely eyesight. The associated

rise in speed and efficiency of communication has led to a weakening of other senses.

In the second part of the 20th Century however, rationality and linearity in literary

society is under pressure according to McLuhan. In his view, the rise of electronic

media supports a return to emotions and ritual media experiences, on a global scale

moreover, which is captured by his well-known concept of a global village being

developed in the current neotribal electronic society.


B. Multiple choice


1. The concept of creative consumption fits


1. an agency-oriented conflict approach


2. an agency-oriented consensus approach


3. a structure-oriented conflict approach


4. a structure-oriented consensus approach


_______________________________________________________________________________________

_____


2. Harold Lasswell’s propaganda theory and strategy is


1. an agency-oriented conflict approach


2. an agency-oriented consensus approach
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